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Karamazov Case

Dostoevsky's Argument for His Vision

Karamazov Case

Dostoevsky's Argument for His Vision

This item is a print on demand title and will be dispatched in 1-3 weeks.

Paperback / softback

£28.99

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN: 9780567704429
Number of Pages: 184
Published: 26/12/2024
Width: 15.2 cm
Height: 23.2 cm

This is a new interpretation of Dostoevsky’s novel The Brothers Karamazov that scrutinizes it as a performative event (the “polyphony” of the novel) revealing its religious, philosophical, and social meanings through the interplay of mentalités or worldviews that constitute an aesthetic whole. This way of discerning the novel’s social vision of sobornost’ (a unity between harmony and freedom), its vision of hope, and its more subtle sacramental presuppositions, raises Tilley’s interpretation beyond the standard “theology and literature” treatments of the novel and interpretations that treat the novel as providing solutions to philosophical problems.

Tilley develops Bakhtin’s thoughtful analysis of the polyphony of the novel using communication theory and readers/hearer response criticism, and by using Bakhtin's operatic image of polyphony to show the error of taking "faith vs. reason", argues that at the end of the novel, the characters learned to carry on, in a quiet shared commitment to memory and hope.

Prologue
Acknowledgements
Introduction

Chapter 1:
Reasoning Faith

Chapter 2:
How to Hear a Polyphonic Novel

Chapter 3:
Six Patterns of Rationality and Irrationality

Chapter 4:
Conversions

Chapter 5:
The Unconverted

Chapter 6:
Returning His Ticket and Refusing Freedom

Chapter 7:
The Social Vision of the Novel: Exegesis

Chapter 8:
Sobornost’ in The Brothers Karamazov: Analysis

Chapter 9:

The Karamazov Case: “Hurrah for Karamazov”

Bibliography
Index

Dr Terrence W. Tilley

Terrence W. Tilley is Professor Emeritus of Theology and Chair of the Department at Fordham University, USA.